Letter of the Holy Father to All the Bishops of the
Church
On the feast of Our Lady's Immaculate Conception, on Dec. 8,
1983, Pope John Paul II personally wrote to every Catholic Bishop asking them
to join him on March 25, 1984 in consecrating the world to Mary. This letter
was made public in London, England on Feb. 10, 1984. On Feb. 14, 1984 in
Washington, D.C., the National Conference of Catholic Bishops publicized this
important letter from the Pope.
We publish here below the complete text of this letter together
with the Pope's Act of Consecration of the world to the Immaculate Heart of
Mary. This text was furnished to The Fatima Crusader in the last week of
February by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops in Ottawa. This same
text was published on February 27, 1984 in the weekly English edition of
L'Osservatore Romano.
Dear Brothers In The Episcopal Ministry,
On 25 March 1983
we began the extraordinary Jubilee of the Redemption. l thank you once again
for uniting yourselves with me in the inauguration, on that same day, of the
Year of the Redemption in your Dioceses. The Solemnity of the Annunciation,
which in the course of the liturgical year recalls the beginning of the work of
the Redemption in the history of humanity, seemed to be a particularly
appropriate time for that inauguration.
This beginning is linked with Advent, and the whole of the
present Year of the Redemption has in a certain sense the character of an
advent, in that the year two thousand since the birth of Christ is drawing
near. We live in this time of waiting for the fulfillment of the second
millennium of the Christian era, sharing the difficult and painful experiences
of the peoples, indeed of all humanity in the contemporary world.
From these experiences is born a particular need, in a certain
sense an interior imperative, to direct ourselves with renewed intensity of
faith precisely to the Redemption of Christ, to its inexhaustible salvific
power. "In Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself . . . and entrusting
to us the message of reconciliation" (2 Cor. 5:19). The Synod of Bishops which
took place last October drew our attention in this same direction.
On this present day, the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception,
the Church meditates on the salvific power of the Redemption of Christ in the
conception of the Woman destined to be the Mother of the Redeemer. In this
there is a further stimulus in order that, in the context of the Jubilee, in
the face of the threats to contemporary humanity which have their roots in sin,
there be made a more intense appeal to the power of the Redemption. If the way
to overcoming sin passes through conversion, then the beginning of this way and
likewise its successive stage can only be in the profession of the infinite
salvific power of the Redemption.
My Dear Brothers!
In the context of the Holy Year of the Redemption, I desire to
profess this power together with you and with the whole Church. I desire to
profess it through the Immaculate Heart of the Mother of God, who in a most
particular degree experienced this salvific power. The words of the Act of
consecration and entrusting which I enclose, correspond, with a few small
changes, to those which I pronounced at Fatima of 13 May 1982. I am profoundly
convinced that the repetition of this Act in the course of the Jubilee Year of
the Redemption corresponds to the expectations of many human hearts, which wish
to renew to the Virgin Mary the testimony of their devotion and to entrust to
Her their sorrows at the many different ills of the present time, their fears
of the menaces that brood over the future, their preoccupations for peace and
justice in the individual nations and in the whole world.
The most fitting date for this common witness seems to be the
Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord during Lent 1984. I would be grateful
if on that day (24 March, on which the Marian Solemnity is liturgically
anticipated, or on 25 March, the Third Sunday of Lent) you would renew this Act
together with me, choosing the way which each of you considers most
appropriate.
In fraternal charity
Pope John Paul II
From the Vatican, 8 December 1983.
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